Talbot v. City of Norfolk

163 S.E. 100, 158 Va. 387, 1932 Va. LEXIS 263
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 24, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 163 S.E. 100 (Talbot v. City of Norfolk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Talbot v. City of Norfolk, 163 S.E. 100, 158 Va. 387, 1932 Va. LEXIS 263 (Va. 1932).

Opinion

Holt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a condemnation proceeding in which the landowner is claiming that the sum awarded him by way of just compensation is inadequate.

Granby street in the city of Norfolk extends from the Custom House, in the heart of that city, to Ocean View. In part it passes through an unbuilt-up section of the city, and in such a section is the Talbot land, fronting thereon. The city desired to shift and widen this street, and as a part of that development it became necessary to take over the lot in controversy. It is irregular in shape, with a street frontage of 632 feet. For 228 feet it has a depth of seventy-five feet; for 230 feet its depth averages about sixty-five feet; and for 172 feet it continues on as a narrow triangle with an average depth of something like twenty-five feet. Its area is 36,000 square feet. When this contemplated change is made Talbot’s land will still front on Granby street. No claim has ever been made for damage to the residue of his property. He claims compensation for land taken and nothing more.

In proper proceedings a commission of competent gentlemen was appointed to assess damages. On it were Thurmer Hoggard, A. Gordon Stephenson, W. B. Baldwin, Paul T. Collins and S. G. L. Hitch, any three of whom were empowered to act.

The court designated the 10th of February, 1930, at two o’clock p. m., for these commissioners to meet upon the premises. At the time designated, they met, viewed the land, heard evidence, and desiring instructions from the [390]*390court, adjourned for that purpose. Later, on the 7th of March, 1930, four of them (Collins absent) again met, received written instructions and proceeded to consider of their judgment. Three of them, Baldwin, Stephenson and Hitch, reported that the value of the land to be taken was $4,000.00. Hoggard dissented, saying that in his opinion it was about $8,000.00.

These instructions were asked for by Talbot and were refused by the court:

“1. Your first duty is to fix the value of the land actually to be taken without regard to effect upon other lands of Mr. Talbot.

“2. If Mr. Talbot claims additional damages to other property you may deduct from any damages to other property of Mr. Talbot any benefits accruing to such other property.”

It then proceeded to instruct the commission as follows:

“1. The court instructs the commissioners that it is their duty to ascertain what will be a just compensation for the land taken; and in performing that duty they should go upon the land, examine it, hear testimony and consider all the facts and circumstances surrounding the situation as it actually exists and thus ascertain what is the value of the land to be taken.

“And if the question of damages to the adjacent property of the owner arises in the case it will then be your duty to assess the damages, if any, to that property, beyond the peculiar benefits that will accrue to such adjacent property from the construction of the works contemplated. And in doing this it will be necessary for you to consider the uses of that adjacent property for all purposes.

“2. The court instructs the commissioners that it is the actual present value of the land with all its adaptations to general and special uses, and not its prospective or speculative or possible value based upon future expenditures and improvements, that is to be considered.”

[391]*391Since Talbot claimed no damages to property not taken, instruction No. 2, tendered on his behalf, need not be considered.

His instruction No. 1 merely told the jury that he was entitled to receive by way of just compensation the value of his land taken, unaffected by any other consideration.

In Town of Galax v. Waugh, 143 Va. 213, 129 S. E. 504, 507, Judge Burks, in discussing James River and Kan. Co. v. Turner, 9 Leigh (36 Va.) 313, said: “This case settles the proposition that for the land taken the owner is entitled to receive full compensation in money, without deduction for any benefits, but that, as to the land not taken, there is to be deducted from the damage sustained peculiar benefits received, and ‘if the damage to the residue of the tract fall short of such peculiar benefits/ the deficiency is not to be charged to the owner, and, it would seem, that he would have no cause of action for damage to such residue.” See, also, Shirley v. Russell, 149 Va. 658, 140 S. E. 816; City of Norfolk v. Chamberlain, 89 Va. 196, 16 S. E. 730; Mitchell v. Thornton, 21 Gratt. (62 Va.) 164; and Code, section 4368.

From these authorities it appears that' Talbot was entitled to be paid in money for his land taken.

This rejected instruction correctly states the general law and might with propriety have been given. The court did, in its own instruction, afterwards, in more general terms, undertake to deal with and to cover the same subject.

In any event, this commission should have been told how values are to be determined. The owner is entitled to just compensation, and just compensation is sometimes said to be fair market value. Duncan v. State Highway Comm., 142 Va. 135, 128 S. E. 546; Appalachian Power Co. v. Johnson, 137 Va. 12, 119 S. E. 253. Market value has been defined as “the price which one, under no compulsion, is willing to take for property which he has for sale, and which another, under no compulsion, being desirous [392]*392and able to buy, is willing to pay for the article.” Chicago Ry. Equipment Co. v. Blair (C. C. A.) 20 Fed. (2d) 10, 13.

Conditions are conceivable in which this rule would not work. A strip of land a foot wid e across the front of a lot, otherwise valuable, might make that lot practically worthless, and force the owner to pay for this strip some extravagant sum. A stranger, speculating upon the necessities of that owner, might also be willing to pay in the open market for this foot wide strip some excessive price. Here market value would not be the standard of compensation, for market value would be nuisance value and should not weigh with a condemnation commission.

In the instant case the fact that the strip to be taken might be used as a key to other Talbot lands is no element of damages.

The court did, in its instruction given and numbered 2, tell the commissioners that they were to determine the present actual value of the land, and in its instruction numbered 1, it told them that they were to consider all facts and circumstances surrounding the situation.

These instructions find ample support in decided cases, (Richmond, etc., Co., v. Chamblin, 100 Va. 401, 41 S. E. 750; Tidewater R. Co. v. Cowan, 106 Va. 817, 824, 56 S. E. 819; Shirley v. Russell, 149 Va. 658, 664, 140 S. E. 816). They were given, as we have seen, and in this there is no error, but proper principles may be misapplied, and to guard against such misapplication the commission should have been told, not only to give no weight to nuisance values, but also to give no weight to the fact that when this lot had been taken, and when Granby street had been widened, the Talbot lands would have the same street frontage that they had before—that other lands of his would, by reason of the development, be made more valuable.

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.E. 100, 158 Va. 387, 1932 Va. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talbot-v-city-of-norfolk-va-1932.